Sculptures

Family

Are we allowed to say the C-word yet? Well, we’re gonna, because we couldn’t possibly have any of the St Mawes blog readers missing the amazing Made in Cornwall Christmas Fair this year! Held in Lemon Quay, Truro from the 28th November – 2nd December, this is the perfect place to pick up all your Christmas gifts and support local talent in one fell swoop. With just under a…

Bought a new house or thinking about redecorating your current one? If so, then colour schemes are probably at the forefront of your mind. Armed with swatches at the ready, anyone planning their décor will be faced with the tricky decision of getting that wall colour just right, but later, when it comes to hanging artwork you may find you’re faced with another dilemma – does the colour palette of…

We tend to assume that we all live in the same world, all see the same things and all experience them in much the same way. It’s a very helpful assumption. For one thing, conversation would become extremely tricky if we couldn’t assume that the people we are speaking to will understand the things we talk about in the same way that we do. Of course, the fact is…

Light and art are more than inseparable: they form a continuum. Quite simply, it is light that is captured on canvass or paper, in paint or through the lens of a camera and the quality of light in Autumn, particularly here in Cornwall, is unique to that season. It has inspired artists for centuries. In the Northern hemisphere, Autumn begins at the moment when the sun crosses the ‘celestial…

At home in Cornwall hurrying autumn skies Leave Bray Hill barren, Stepper jutting bare, And hold the moon above the sea-wet sand. The very last of late September dies In frosty silence and the hills declare How vast the sky is, looked at from the land. From ‘Back from Australia’ by John Betjeman The crowds of sightseeing tourists throbbing through Cornish towns and villages have dissipated. The frantic busyness of…

Modern photography is generally agreed to have begun with the invention of the Daguerrotype in 1839. At that time art served a dual purpose, that of providing an aesthetic experience and that of accurately documenting people, places and historical events for posterity. The camera was very soon capable of a far greater degree of accuracy than the human hand and at far greater speed and, equally quickly, it was regarded…

This week, the gallery is buzzing! Internationally renowned Australian fashion photographer, landscape photographer and New York gallery owner, Anthony Horth is joining the artists exhibited at St Mawes. This is a new direction for us and it’s one that’s as exciting as it is challenging. Challenging because photography is so very different in its medium and execution from painting or sculpture. It is a comparatively recent format, one…

The relationship between art and Cornwall’s coastline, its seas and sands, its rocks and cliffs, is a theme that we return to again and again, not surprisingly! The Cornish seascape has inspired artists for centuries and, if anything, that inspiration has only become stronger over time. (An online search for Cornish art or Cornish artists will produce thousands of examples of paintings and painters of these shorelines, from every imaginable…

No-one who visits any part of the Cornish coast can help noticing the things that have inspired artists and writers for centuries: the ever changing colour and quality of the light, the interplay of sky and water, the sheer power and magic of nature on display. And, of course, if they do stop to think about the connection between these stunning vistas and artists, and the art they produce, they…

We’d like to imagine that the chief reason for planning a trip to St Mawes, or one of the chief reasons anyway, is our wonderful art gallery in this wonderful village. We would like to imagine that, so we’ll go on imagining it! But while doing so we will reflect on a few of the innumerable other attractions that make this a magical place for visitors and locals alike... Our…